Women Like Us comedians Mandy Nolan and Ellen Briggs are different from your usual comedians. For a start they’re women. They’re mothers. They’re middle aged and they are country girls.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
With over 50 sold out shows to their credit, the girls have performed to packed houses at Melbourne International Comedy Festival, Sydney Comedy Festival’s Enmore Theatre, Adelaide Fringe and Perth Festival, as well as taking their comedy stylings to halls, pubs, clubs and theatres around the country. And now it’s Sawtell RSL’s turn with Women Like Us coming to town on Friday September 15.
Women Like Us is two hours of stand up comedy – an hour a piece. This isn’t your regular stand up comedy show. This is as one review described it ‘a two tena pad show’. These are untold laugh out loud women’s stories, smack bang centre stage.
Small town showgirls, there are few sacred cows that Briggs and Nolan shy away from milking, with seven children and thirty five years stage time between them, their 'failure to parent' is the focus of their material, along with the beauty industry, getting older, getting fatter, strange surgeries, weird TV shows, obsessions, frustrations, and at the end of the day, who unpacks the dishwasher.
After their performance in the sold out Up Front showcase at the Melbourne Comedy Festival, one reviewer raved ‘Two totally relatable ladies who hit the nail on the head of charismatic female comedy. Prepare yourself to be hunched over in hysterics!’
Ellen Briggs never intended to be a comedian. She just wanted to write a book. That's why just over a decade ago she enrolled in Mandy’s stand up comedy class.
“If the sole purpose of teaching over 1000 people was just to get someone with Ellen’s talent and ability up on the stage, it was well worth it,” Mandy said.
“I’d hate to think what would have become of her if she hadn’t found her feet as a comedian. She just had too many stories to waste on her Labrador. It’s a real privilege to share the stage with someone who is just getting better and better with every show. She’s a knock out.”
Audiences have complained of aching stomach muscles, sore jaws, and at one show a woman actually injured herself when she laughed so much she slipped from her chair onto the floor.
Sawtell RSL
Saturday 15 September
Doors open at 7pm. Show 8pm.
Tix $30
Online at sawtellrsl.com.au
Enquiries to 02 66531577